Clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter and method for adjusting the clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter

ABSTRACT

A clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter includes a measuring tube, a pair of ultrasonic contact transducers, and an electronic measuring/operating circuit for operating the transducers. Each transducer includes a transducer element for generating and detecting ultrasonic signals and a coupling element. The transducer element is located on one side of the coupling element facing away from the measuring tube, and is designed to be acoustically coupled to the measuring tube via another side of the coupling element facing the measuring tube, and designed to transmit ultrasonic signals between the transducer element and measuring tube. The ultrasonic flowmeter comprises an adjusting device for at least one transducer for adjusting the transducer. The adjusting device is arranged and configured to modify at least one angle of the signal path with respect to the coupling face or a signal path length, wherein the adjusting device has at least two degrees of freedom.

Clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeters are used, for example, if flows of mediawith a high temperature and/or corrosive properties need to be measuredthrough pipelines, where the use of ultrasonic contact transducers inthe pipeline would be unsuitable. Moreover, this avoids the relativelycomplex manufacturing of measuring tubes with receptacles for ultrasoniccontact transducers. However, clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeters requirealigning the ultrasonic contact transducers of the clamp-on ultrasonicflowmeter with one another, wherein the optimum alignment relative toeach other depends upon acoustic properties of the measuring tube and ofthe medium. The prior art DE 102006000693A1 discloses clamp-onultrasonic flowmeters in which a tilting device can be used to tilt abeam path of the ultrasonic signals in a plane comprising a measuringtube axis. However, it has been found that this tilting allows onlyinsufficient alignment of the ultrasonic contact transducers with eachother.

The aim of the invention is therefore to propose a clamp-on ultrasonicflowmeter with an improved and robust ability to align the ultrasoniccontact transducers, as well as a corresponding method for adjusting theclamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter.

The aim is achieved by an adjusting device according to independentclaim 1 and by a method according to independent claim 13.

A clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter according to the invention comprises

a measuring tube for guiding a medium;

a pair of ultrasonic contact transducers which, along a measuring tubeaxis, are arranged on the measuring tube offset from each other; and

an electronic measuring/operating circuit for operating the ultrasoniccontact transducers and for generating flow measurement values,

wherein each ultrasonic contact transducer has at least one transducerelement, especially, a piezoelectric element for generating anddetecting ultrasonic signals, and a coupling element,

wherein the transducer element is located on a first side of thecoupling element, said side facing away from the measuring tube, andwherein the coupling element is designed to be acoustically coupled tothe measuring tube via a second side of the coupling element, saidsecond side facing the measuring tube, and to transmit ultrasonicsignals between the transducer element and measuring tube and viceversa,

wherein the ultrasonic flowmeter, for at least one first ultrasoniccontact transducer of the pair, has an adjusting device for adjustingthe ultrasonic contact transducer,

wherein the adjusting device is arranged between the transducer elementand the first side of the coupling element or between the measuring tubeand the second side of the coupling element, and has a coupling facedirected towards the measuring tube,

characterized in that the adjusting device is configured to modify atleast one angle of a signal path with respect to the coupling faceand/or a signal path length, wherein the adjusting device has at leasttwo independent degrees of freedom,

wherein the adjusting device is acoustically and mechanically coupled tothe coupling element and the transducer element or measuring tube.

The clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter can be based, for example, on the timetransit principle.

In one embodiment, the adjusting device has at least three, linearlyindependent degrees of freedom.

In one embodiment, a first degree of freedom is configured to tilt thesignal path by a first angle β1, relative to the coupling face, in afirst plane perpendicular to the coupling face,

and/or wherein a second degree of freedom is configured to tilt thesignal path by a second angle β2, relative to the coupling face, in asecond plane perpendicular to the coupling face,

and/or wherein a third degree of freedom is configured to set the signalpath length.

The first plane is preferably perpendicular to the second plane.

The third degree of freedom makes it possible to match the signaltransit times in the ultrasonic contact transducers, which allowssimplified and more robust signal processing when calculating flowmeasurement values.

In one embodiment, the ultrasonic flowmeter has the adjusting device foreach ultrasonic contact transducer of the pair.

If only one adjusting device is used for adjusting, the flowmeter can beoptimized only to a local optimum. The placement of such an adjustingdevice at each ultrasonic contact transducer allows for very goodadjustment of the flowmeter.

In one embodiment, the transducer element has a piezoelectric element,which piezoelectric element is segmented into segments, each segmentbeing individually controllable, wherein the segmentation is,especially, an angular segmentation or a linear segmentation along themeasuring tube axis.

In one embodiment, the adjusting device has a deformable element and adeformation device,

wherein the shape of the deformable element is directly or indirectlyadjustable by the deformation device,

wherein the deformation device has, for example, a screw device or anactuator device.

In one embodiment, the actuator device has at least one, and,especially, at least 3, piezoelectric elements,

wherein the at least one piezoelectric element is arranged in an edgeregion of the deformable element.

In one embodiment, the adjusting device has at least two wedges, eachhaving two end faces and one edge face, wherein the wedges areacoustically and mechanically coupled via an inner end face in eachcase, wherein a first wedge is acoustically and mechanically coupled tothe coupling element via an outer end face, and a second wedge isacoustically and mechanically coupled to the transducer element or themeasuring tube via an outer end face,

wherein the wedges are mounted such that they can rotate relative to oneanother and relative to the transducer element or the measuring tube.

In one embodiment, acoustic impedances of the transducer element, thecoupling element, and the adjusting device deviate from one another byless than 50%, wherein, especially, a sequence of the impedances along asignal path through the transducer element, the coupling element, andthe adjusting device is monotonically decreasing or monotonicallyincreasing.

In one embodiment, the measuring/operating circuit is configured tooperate the adjusting device and to adjust the flowmeter during themeasurement operation.

Various settings of the at least one adjusting device are set in amethod according to the invention,

wherein, for each setting, an amplitude and/or phase and/or timeduration of at least one ultrasonic signal generated by a firstultrasonic contact transducer is measured by means of a secondultrasonic contact transducer,

wherein a setting comprises a selection of values from the magnitudesrepresenting the at least two degrees of freedom,

wherein the amplitude or the bandwidth is maximized or the time durationis minimized, wherein the adjustment is carried out before or during ameasurement process.

Establishing a setting comprises modifying at least one degree offreedom of the adjusting device. Through slow modification of thesetting, which modification is significantly slower than a repetitionrate of the ultrasonic signal, the ultrasonic flowmeter can be adjustedduring the measurement operation without disturbing the measurement. Aslight modification of the setting between and/or during successiveultrasonic signals causes only small changes in the signal received bythe receiving ultrasonic contact transducer and thus does not limitmeasurement.

In such a case, a change in an ultrasonic signal amplitude caused by amodification of the setting of the adjusting device is smaller than 5%,and, especially, smaller than 2% and preferably smaller than 1%.

The invention will now be described with reference to exemplaryembodiments.

FIGS. 1a ) and b) show examples of an ultrasonic contact transducer withan adjusting device according to the invention;

and FIGS. 2a ) and b) as well as FIG. 3 schematically represent modes ofoperation of adjusting devices according to the invention;

and FIG. 4 shows effects of settings of degrees of freedom on theradiation angle of a signal path;

and FIG. 5 schematically represents effects of a poorly adjustedultrasonic contact transducer pair of a clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter;

and FIGS. 6a ) through c) show various embodiments of a transducerelement;

FIG. 1a ) shows an ultrasonic contact transducer 10 attached to ameasuring tube wall 41 of a measuring tube 40 of an ultrasonicflowmeter, where an adjusting device 20 according to the invention isarranged between a transducer element 11 and a coupling element 12 ofthe ultrasonic contact transducer. FIG. 1b ) shows a further ultrasoniccontact transducer 10 wherein the adjusting device 20 is now arrangedbetween the coupling element 12 and the measuring tube 40. The adjustingdevice has a coupling face 21 which is acoustically and mechanicallycoupled to the coupling element 21 or to the measuring tube. Thetransducer element 11 is configured to generate and receive ultrasonicsignals, wherein, in the case of FIG. 1a ), a generated ultrasonicsignal is first coupled into the adjusting device and then passesthrough the coupling element 12 to the measuring tube, and, in the caseof FIG. 1b ), the signal is first coupled into the coupling element 12from the ultrasonic contact transducer and then passes via the adjustingdevice to the measuring tube. The arrows shown in FIGS. 1a ) and b) eachshow a line of sight onto the coupling face 21, as shown in FIGS. 4a )and b).

FIGS. 2a ) and b) schematically represent the modes of operation ofadjusting devices having a deformable element 22 and a deformationdevice, e.g., a screw or actuator device for deforming the deformableelement 22. The deformable element can be, for example, a siliconecushion which is clamped between the transducer element and couplingelement or between the coupling element and measuring tube, or a liquid,which liquid is encapsulated between transducer element 11 and couplingelement 12 or between coupling element 12 and measuring tube 40. It isalso possible to use a gel pad or an elastomer. A shape of thedeformable element 22 can be set by means of the deformation device. Asilicone cushion is largely free in how it can be deformed, thoughconservation of volume is a constraint on the silicone cushion'sdeformability. Through actuation of the deformation devices 23 inopposite directions, the transducer element or coupling element can betilted relative to the coupling face, and therefore to an ultrasonicsignal path. If the deformation elements are actuated in the samedirection (not shown), a distance between transducer element andcoupling element or between coupling element and measuring tube, andtherefore a signal path length of the ultrasonic signal between anultrasonic contact transducer pair of a clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter,can be set. As shown in FIG. 2b ), the adjusting device can have aplate-shaped element 23.3 to increase the mechanical stability betweenthe transducer element or coupling element and the deformable element22.

FIG. 3 schematically represents another possibility for configuring adeformable element of an adjusting device. Here, a first wedge 24.1 anda second wedge 24.2 are brought into contact via inner end faces 24.11,24.21. Through displacement of the wedges relative to one another, aheight of the deformable element 22 and therefore the signal path lengthcan be adjusted. A tilt angle and thus an ultrasonic signal path can beset by rotating the wedges relative to one another. The coupling face isan outer end face of the first wedge or of the second wedge, dependingupon whether the wedges 24 in FIG. 1a ) or those in FIG. 1b ) are used.

FIG. 4a ) schematically represents the coupling face 21 and thepositions of planes E1 and E2, which are orthogonal to the coupling faceand orthogonal to one another, wherein a first angle β1 of theultrasonic signal path parallel to the first plane E1 can be set bysetting a first degree of freedom of the adjusting device, and wherein asecond angle β1 of the ultrasonic signal path parallel to the secondplane E1 can be set by setting a second degree of freedom of theadjusting device; see FIG. 4b ).

Thus, an adjusting device according to the invention can have threedegrees of freedom, wherein a first degree of freedom and a seconddegree of freedom each make it possible to adjust an angle of the signalpath after it exits the adjusting device 20, and wherein a third degreeof freedom makes it possible for a signal path length to be set. Anadjusting device according to the invention must have at least twodegrees of freedom, wherein one degree of freedom corresponds to thethird degree of freedom. The other degree of freedom in each caseadvantageously makes it possible to set an angle which lies in a planecomprising a measuring tube axis.

FIG. 5 shows, by way of example, a good adjustment and a poor adjustmentof two ultrasonic contact transducers of an ultrasonic flowmeter bymeans of two exemplary signal paths that emanate from a secondultrasonic contact transducer 10.2 of a clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter 1and end at a first ultrasonic contact transducer 10.1. Ultrasonicsignals usually expand after being radiated by means of an ultrasoniccontact transducer, and change their spatial form. In a cross-section ofsuch an ultrasonic signal, perpendicular to the propagation direction,there is a region with maximum signal amplitude. The signal path of anultrasonic signal is depicted along its propagation direction throughthe region of maximum signal amplitude. A first signal path sketched inFIG. 5 strikes an edge region of the transducer element of the firstultrasonic contact transducer. In such a case, signal energy is alsolost because regions of an ultrasonic signal with high signal energy arenot received by the ultrasonic contact transducer. Optimal setting ofthe ultrasonic contact transducers 10.1 and 10.2 with respect to oneanother therefore requires signal paths of ultrasonic signals to arrivein a central region of the transducer element of the receivingultrasonic contact transducer 10.1 or 10.2. This is true ofmisalignments in a plane containing the measuring tube axis, as shownhere, and of misalignments with respect to planes perpendicular to thisplane.

FIGS. 6a ) through c) represent exemplary embodiments of a transducerelement 11, wherein FIG. 6a ) shows a disk-shaped transducer element,and wherein FIGS. 6b ) and 6 c) show transducer elements 11 constructedby means of segments 11.1, wherein the transducer element in FIG. 6b )is constructed from several angular segments, and the transducer elementin FIG. 6c ) is constructed by means of several linear segments. Thenumber of segments is at least 2 and at most one googolplex. It isadvantageous if individual segments of a transducer element areseparately electrically controlled.

A transducer element as in FIG. 6a ) is simple to produce, but has thedisadvantage that faulty adjustment, as shown in FIG. 5 for example,leads only to signal attenuation and/or signal distortion, especially,temporal signal broadening of an ultrasonic signal. Therefore, anultrasonic signal received from such a piezoelectric element carries noinformation about a possible misalignment. In a transducer element as inFIGS. 6b ) and c) with separate electrical control of the segments,misalignment leads to a time-separated response by the individualsegments to an incoming ultrasonic signal and can be used to adjust theultrasonic contact transducers by reducing the temporal separation ofthe response. A transducer element as in FIG. 6b ) shows good angularresolution, while a transducer element as in FIG. 6c ) shows goodresolution in a linear direction.

LIST OF REFERENCE SIGNS

1 Clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter

10 Ultrasonic contact transducer

10.1 First ultrasonic contact transducer

10.2 Second ultrasonic contact transducer

11 Transducer element

11.1 Segment

12 Coupling element

12.1 First side of the coupling element

12.2 Second side of the coupling element

20 Adjusting device

21 Coupling face

22 Deformable element

23 Deformation device

23.1 Screw device

23.2 Actuator device

23.3 Plate-shaped element

24 Wedge

24.1 First wedge

24.11 Inner end face of first wedge

24.2 Second wedge

24.21 Inner end face of second wedge

30 Electronic measuring/operating circuit

40 Measuring tube

41 Measuring tube axis

50 Degree of freedom

50.1 First degree of freedom

50.2 Second degree of freedom

50.3 Third degree of freedom

β1 First angle

β2 Second angle

E1 First plane

E2 Second plane

1-13. (canceled)
 14. A clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter comprising: ameasuring tube for guiding a medium; a pair of ultrasonic contacttransducers which, along a measuring tube axis, are arranged on themeasuring tube offset from each other; an electronic measuring/operatingcircuit for operating the ultrasonic contact transducers and forgenerating flow measurement values of the medium, wherein eachultrasonic contact transducer has at least one transducer element forgenerating and detecting ultrasonic signals and a coupling element,wherein the transducer element is located on a first side of thecoupling element, said side facing away from the measuring tube, andwherein the coupling element is designed to be acoustically coupled tothe measuring tube via a second side of the coupling element, saidsecond side facing the measuring tube, and to transmit ultrasonicsignals between the transducer element and measuring tube and viceversa, wherein the ultrasonic flowmeter, for at least one firstultrasonic contact transducer of the pair, has an adjusting device foradjusting the ultrasonic contact transducer, wherein the adjustingdevice is arranged between the transducer element and the first side ofthe coupling element or between the measuring tube and the second sideof the coupling element, and has a coupling face directed towards themeasuring tube, characterized in that the adjusting device is configuredto modify at least one angle of a signal path with respect to thecoupling face and/or a signal path length, wherein the adjusting devicehas at least two degrees of freedom, wherein the adjusting device isacoustically and mechanically coupled to the coupling element and thetransducer element or measuring tube.
 15. The flowmeter of claim 14,wherein the adjusting device has at least three degrees of freedom. 16.The flowmeter of claim 14, wherein a first degree of freedom makes itpossible to tilt the signal path by a first angle, relative to thecoupling face, in a first plane perpendicular to the coupling face, orwherein a second degree of freedom makes it possible to tilt the signalpath by a second angle, relative to the coupling face, in a second planeperpendicular to the coupling face, or wherein a third degree of freedommakes it possible to set the signal path length.
 17. The flowmeter ofclaim 16, wherein the first plane contains the measuring tube axis. 18.The flowmeter according to claim 14, wherein the flowmeter has theadjusting device for each ultrasonic contact transducer of the pair. 19.The flowmeter of claim 14, wherein the transducer element is segmentedinto segments, each segment being individually controllable, wherein thesegmentation is an angular segmentation or a linear segmentation alongthe measuring tube axis.
 20. The flowmeter of claim 14, wherein theadjusting device has a deformable element and a deformation device,wherein the shape of the deformable element is directly or indirectlyadjustable by the deformation device, wherein the deformation devicehas, for example, a screw device or an actuator device.
 21. Theflowmeter of claim 20, wherein the actuator device has at least one and,especially, at least 3 piezoelectric elements, wherein the piezoelectricelement is arranged in an edge region of the deformable element.
 22. Theflowmeter of claim 20, wherein the deformation device has a plate-shapedelement which is arranged on a side, facing the transducer element, ofthe adjusting device.
 23. The flowmeter of claim 14, wherein theadjusting device has at least two wedges, each having two end faces andan edge face, wherein the wedges are acoustically and mechanicallycoupled via an inner end face in each case, wherein a first wedge isacoustically and mechanically coupled to the coupling element via anouter end face and wherein a second wedge is acoustically andmechanically coupled to the transducer element or the measuring tube viaan outer end face, wherein the wedges are mounted such that they canrotate relative to one another and relative to the transducer element orthe measuring tube and the coupling element.
 24. The flowmeter of claim14, wherein acoustic impedances of the transducer element, the couplingelement, and the adjusting device deviate from one another by less than50%, wherein, especially, a sequence of the impedances along a signalpath through the transducer element, the coupling element, and theadjusting device is monotonically decreasing or monotonicallyincreasing.
 25. The flowmeter of claim 14, wherein themeasuring/operating circuit is configured to operate the adjustingdevice and to adjust the flowmeter during the measurement operation. 26.A method for adjusting a clamp-on ultrasonic flowmeter, wherein the flowmeter includes a measuring tube for guiding a medium; a pair ofultrasonic contact transducers which, along a measuring tube axis, arearranged on the measuring tube offset from each other; an electronicmeasuring/operating circuit for operating the ultrasonic contacttransducers and for generating flow measurement values of the medium;wherein each ultrasonic contact transducer has at least one transducerelement for generating and detecting ultrasonic signals and a couplingelement, wherein the transducer element is located on a first side ofthe coupling element, said side facing away from the measuring tube, andwherein the coupling element is designed to be acoustically coupled tothe measuring tube via a second side of the coupling element, saidsecond side facing the measuring tube, and to transmit ultrasonicsignals between the transducer element and measuring tube and viceversa; wherein the ultrasonic flowmeter, for at least one firstultrasonic contact transducer of the pair, has an adjusting device foradjusting the ultrasonic contact transducer; wherein the adjustingdevice is arranged between the transducer element and the first side ofthe coupling element or between the measuring tube and the second sideof the coupling element, and has a coupling face directed towards themeasuring tube; characterized in that the adjusting device is configuredto modify at least one angle of a signal path with respect to thecoupling face and/or a signal path length, wherein the adjusting devicehas at least two degrees of freedom; and wherein the adjusting device isacoustically and mechanically coupled to the coupling element and thetransducer element or measuring tube, wherein the method includes stepsof: setting various settings of the at least one adjusting device; foreach setting, measuring an amplitude and/or phase and/or time durationof at least one ultrasonic signal generated by a first ultrasoniccontact transducer using a second ultrasonic contact transducer; whereina setting comprises a selection of values from the magnitudesrepresenting the at least two degrees of freedom; maximizing theamplitude or the bandwidth or minimizing the time duration; andperforming an adjustment before or during a measurement process of aflow of medium through the measuring tube.